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www.thekathrynwheel,blogspot.com

 

Stamps:

Olivia, Carols' Flower, sentiment all by Stampotique

One in a series of new handmade notebooks I've been working on. This one features vintage wood type spelling WRITE! Typescale

Traveler's Notebook, Swordart online aneme scene

Filofax Bloomsbury...has really soft leather

The monthly view, again copied from the Moleskine layout.

It was all I could do to politely keep my distance while she leafed through her notebooks. Surely there's a way for me to make a good living off my obsession with handwriting, journal-keeping, and secrets. Isn't there?

Shook off writers block, a random collection of Piccadilly notebooks in various states of usage

facsimile Leonardo da Vinci notebook pages

A friend of mine wanted to know how I was taught to layout a field book. It's a simple process by which you can use almost any notebook for most forms of field research. I learned this technique when I was in Archaeological Field School at Ohio University almost a decade ago. You could use this format for:

 

1. Journaling

2. Writing

3. Class Notes

4. Field Research

 

All you'll need is a lined notebook (or graph), some colored pencils and a ruler.

 

I always stuck the ruler in the back of the notebook because I had to lay out a grid in the notebook in case we found something on the site.

 

1. Lay the ruler against the outside edge of the notebook and draw a red line down page. For sake of ease, I would just draw the line the width of the ruler since it was usually plenty of space for what I needed in the margins.

 

2. In the margin that you've created, you can record whatever headings you need to outline the entry. When I was doing archeology, we had to record the date, what plot we were on, what level, etc. If you were using it for class notes or story ideas, then you can change the headings as you see fit.

 

3. Alternate the colors of pencil you use for the various functions in the layout. I usually used a blue pencil to divide one entry from the next as it was a good visual cue. The body of the text was written however you wanted it to be and along the margin I would list any buzzwords that I knew were important from the entry. This could be anything from a "buzzword" in a conversation, a vocab word from a class' lecture, or something that you would need to easily reference.

  

I would circle the buzzword in the margin and point to the entry that spoke of it. Usually this was done in green.

 

4. Anything that was a follow-up to what you were writing about, a to-do, was added and marked with a yellow pencil.

 

Since it was troublesome to carry a lot of colored pencils with me in the notebook and a bit too complicated to use them while entering the data in the field they were usually used when I got home as a follow-up.

 

I would usually mark out the margins of a few pages in advance of where I was in the notebook so that I had plenty of room to write. Inside the book itself I would stash a green pencil since that was the color I used to mark anything important on the page.

 

You could easily substitute the use of colored pencils for high-liters if that's what you like

Terrier motif printed on a design classic Moleskine Cahier Pocket Notebook.

 

The image was printed using a Gocco, a tabletop Japanese screen printing system. Inky blobs and smudges are part of the process :)

 

Pockets designed for name cards is also added. Thanks Midori!

For the HA 'website' challenge, and also for joining a challenge at 2Peas, 'Thinking Inking Class Week 5'.

 

I was so inspired from the card at the Techniques Article section:

Many Enhance your projects with a bit of flair! by Shari Carroll .

I've been adoring the one at the bottom most.

 

So I tried to make like that image to use a piece of Tim Holtz fragment using Rubs-on resisting technique that I learned from Jennifer's class at 2Peas this week.

After my image was finished, I decided to make it for my notebook.

*I used several alcohol ink techniques for this.

 

stamp used:

HA SE: Artistic Windows / S5041 (The manuscript stamp on a paper flower.)

HA Clear design Friends / CL351 (I use only the word 'inspire' from the sentiment 'You inspire me')

 

A closeup photo can be seen at:

www.flickr.com/photos/tomoh/3737537571/in/photostream/

 

Today (Monday) is the National holidays in my country, and I'm gonna go to a home party of one of my firiends from now on. So I would post my article about this project to my blog after I came back. (Maybe, tommorow.)

Sorry for the inconvenience for the people are used to enjoy reading it.

   

updated: July 21st, '09 GMT

I've just updated my blog where materials etc. are written:

http://tomohsattic.blogspot.com/2009/07/inspire-notebook.html

If you interested in it, please access.

 

TFL! :)

Scanned notebook page of my early design sketch for HotWired, May 1994. More to come

I made this notions notebook to hold my sewing tools for a class I'm taking this weekend with AM.

Blogged Here

page from the notebook project, "Adhere to me" 2011

spiral bound paper notebooks with silk-screened cover

Have had several people email me an' comment about my luck on finding the right light, scene, objects, etc. Here's my "luck"; a notebook I keep on my truck seat when I'm traveling. I've gotten fairly good at writing in it, while driving, without looking at the page...

25 for BD55

50 for BD 85

100 for BD 130

Molde e tutorial saiu na Guia do Ateliê especial Natal ed 7. Já nas bancas....

Editora alto astral

Traveler's Notebook, Swordart online aneme scene

..a close-up of the notebook-style journalling on the page. I just stapled a bunch of notebook papers into a little pad. =)

some superb notebook action there, the mauve graphpaper merely a guide

Everyone keeps admiring the moleskine. I admit, I fell into the popularity and brought one too. It's very cute and fun, but I think I found competition for the moleskine. It's very cute too.

 

It's a notebook from a japanese company called "Kokuyo". They're very similiar to many ways. Starting at the cover, both have a rubberband to keep the book closed. View my other photos for a comparison

This is the first photo of the notebooks on my bed.

Yes, I have a messy room.

Painted Traveler's Notebook, A4. A5 and Reguslar size ...

flying in the face of stormy weathers, coming through heavy waters and emerging as a figure of beauty on the other side

Checking out the local art supply store, Racine's, in Fort Bragg (crappy service, by the way), I passed this rack of Moleskine goodness. Since it was my birthday, the better half was on it right away, adding some new additions to my stash.

Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams, The Notebook, 2004

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